blander








adjective, bland·er, bland·est.

  1. pleasantly gentle or agreeable: a bland, affable manner.
  2. soothing or balmy, as air: a bland southern breeze.
  3. nonirritating, as food or medicines: a bland diet.
  4. not highly flavored; mild; tasteless: a bland sauce.
  5. lacking in special interest, liveliness, individuality, etc.; insipid; dull: a bland young man; a bland situation comedy.
  6. unemotional, indifferent, or casual: his bland acknowledgment of guilt.

adjective

  1. devoid of any distinctive or stimulating characteristics; uninteresting; dullbland food
  2. gentle and agreeable; suave
  3. (of the weather) mild and soothing
  4. unemotional or unmoveda bland account of atrocities
adj.

1660s, from Italian blando “delicate,” or Old French bland “flattering, complimentary,” both from Latin blandus “smooth-talking, flattering, alluring,” perhaps from PIE *mlad-, nasalized variant of *meld-, extended form of root *mel- (see melt). Related: Blandly; blandness. Latin also had blandiloquentulus “flattering in speech,” which might have yielded a useful English *blandiloquent.

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